RBSE Solutions for Class 10 Social Science History Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World
Activity:
Page – 108
Question
1.
Imagine that you are Marco Polo. Write a letter from China to describe the
world of print which you have seen there.
Answer:
As Marco polo, I shall write following type of letter about the world of print
which I have seen here.
From AD 594 onwards, books in China were printed by rubbing paper against the
inked surface of w’ood block. As both sides of the thin, porous sheet could not
be printed, the traditional Chinese ‘accordion book’ was folded and stiched at
the side. Superbly skilled craftsmen could duplicate, with remarkable accuracy,
the beauty of calligraphy .
Discuss:
Page – 113
Question
2.
Write briefly why some people feared that the development of print could lead
to the growth of dissenting ideas.
Answer:
Print created the possibility of wide circulation of ideas, and introduced a
new world of debate and discussion. Print and popular religious literature
stimulated many distinctive individual interpretations of faith even among
little-educated working people. Even those who disagreed with established
authorities could now’ print and circulate their ideas. In this way-, the
spread of opposing viwes were encouraged.
Many were apprehensive of the effects that the easier access to the printed
word and the wider circulation of books, could have on people’s minds. It was
feared that if there was no control over what was printed and read then
rebellious and irreligious thoughts might spread. Many religious authorities
and monarchs, as well as many writers and artists expressed that the authority
of ‘valuable’ literature would be destroyed.
Discuss:
Page – 116
Question
3.
Why do some historians think that print culture created the basis for the
French Revolution ?
Answer:
Some historians think that print culture created the basis for the French
Revolution. In this connection, the following arguments have been put forward:
1. Print popularised the ideas of the Elightenment thinkers. Collectively,
their writings provided critical commentary on tradition, super stitution and
despotism.
2.
Print created a new culture of dialogue and debate. All values, norms and
institutions were re-evaluated and discussed by public that had become aware of
the pow er of reason and recognised the need to question existing ideas and
beliefs.
3.
By the 1780s, there was came immense literature that mocked the royalty and
criticised their morality. Cartoons and caricatures typically suggested that
monarchy was engaged only in sensual pleasures while the common people suffered
many hardships. This literature aroused the feeling of revolution among the
people.
Activity:
Page – 118
Question
4.
Look at the text – book Fig. 13. What impact do such advertisements have on the
public mind ? Do you think everyone reacts to printed material in the same way
?
Answer:
1. Such advertisements have a great influence on the minds of people. These
advertisements encourage them to buy the advertised products.
2.
No, .everyone does not react to the printed material in the same way. If people
accept these things, then some people deny these things. People also interpret
things in their own way.
RBSE
Class 10 Social Science Print Culture and the Modern World Textbook Questions
and Answers
Write
in brief
Question
1.
Give reasons for the following :
(a) Woodblock print only came to Europe after 1295.
(b) Martin Luther was in favour of print and spoke out in praise of it.
(c) The Roman Catholic Church began keeping an index of Prohibited books from
the mid-sixteenth century.
(d) Gandhi said the fight for Swaraj is a fight for liberty of speech, liberty
of the press, and freedom of association.
Answer:
(a) Why did wood block print only came to Europe after 1295:
The technology of w ood block print was available in China. In 1295. Marco
Polo, a great explorer returned to Italy after many years of exploration in
China. Marco Polo brought this technology of wood block back w ith him. Hence
technology of wood block print only came to Europe after 1295.
(b)
Why was Martin Luther in favour of print and spoke out in praise of it:
Martin Luther was a religious leader of Germany . He was a great supporter of
print. In 1517, he wrote ‘Ninety Five Thesis’ criticising many of the practices
and rituals of the Roman Catholic Church. A printed copy of this was posted on
a Church door in witten¬berg. It challenged the Church to debate his ideas.
Martin Luther’s writings were immediately reproduced in Vast numbers and read
widely. This led to a division within the Church and to the beginning of the
Protestant Reformation. Deeply grateful to print, Luther said ‘‘Printing is the
ultimate gift of God and the greatest one”.
(c)
Why did The Roman Catholic Church begin keeping an index of Prohibited books
from the mid-sixteenth century?
Print and popular religious literature encouraged many individual
interpretations of faith even among little-educated working people. Some people
interpreted the message of the Bible and formulated a view of God and creation
that enraged the Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Church troubled by such
effects of popular readings and questionings of faith, imposed severe controls
over publishers and booksellers and began to maintain an index of Prohibited
Books from 1558.
(d)
Gandhiji’s views on fight for Swaraj:
Mahatma Gandhi’s main objective was to get Swaraj. In 1922, Gandhiji said that
the fight for Swaraj is a fight for liberty of speech, liberty of the press and
freedom of association. According to him the liberty of speech, liberty of the
press and liberty of association are essential elements for Swaraj. The aim of
achieving Swaraj will be completed only when these three freedoms would be
available to all Indians.
Question
2.
Write short notes to show what you know about :
(a) The Gutenberg Press,
(b) Erasmus’s idea of the printed book,
(c) The Vernacular Press Act.
Answer:
(a) The Gutenberg Press:
Johann Gutenberg invented a model of a printing press in 1448, which was later
on known as Gutenberg press. In this, Gutenberg made new inventions in the
field of print. In this press along handle was attached to the screw. This
handle was used to turn the screw and press down the platen over the printing
block that was placed on top of a sheet of damp paper. Gutenberg developed
metal types for each of the 26 characters of the Roman alphabet and devised a
way of moving them around so as to compose different words of the text.
This
came to be known as the moveable type printing machine and it remained the
basic print technology over the next 300 years. Books could now be produced
much faster than was possible when each print block was prepared by carving a
piece of wood by hand. The Gutenberg press could print 250 sheets on one side
per hour. The first book he printed was the Bible. About 180 copies were
printed and it took three years to produce them. By the standards of the time,
this was fast production.
(b)
Erasmus’s idea of the printed books:
Erasmus was a Latin scholar and a Catholic reformer. He criticised the excesses
of Catholicism but kept his distance from Martin Luther.
Erasmus expressed a deep anxiety about printing. He wrote in 1508 in Adages
that the books are like swarms, which could fly to the every comer of the
world. It may be possible that one book contributes something worth knowing but
the very multitude of them is hurtful to scholarship, because it creates a glut
and even in good things satiety is most harmful. Printers fill the world with
books, not just trifling things but stupid, ignorant, slanderous, scandalous,
raving, irreligious and seditious books. The number of them is such that even
the valuable publications lose their value.
(c)
The Vernacular Press Act:
After the revolt of 1857, the attitude to freedom of the press changed. Enraged
Englishmen demanded to crush the native press. As vernacular newspapers were
considered as nationalists, the British government decided to curb the freedom
of the Indian press. In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed, modelled on
the Irish Press Laws. It provided the government with extensive rights to
censor reports and editorials in the vernacular press. From now on the
government kept regular track of the vernacular newspapers published in
different provinces. When a report was judged as seditious, the newspaper was
warned, and if the warning was ignored the press was liable to be seized and
the printing machinery confiscated.
Question
3.
What did the spread of print culture in nineteenth century India mean to :
(a) Women,
(b) The poor,
(c) Reformers.
Answer:
(a) Print culture and women:
1. Lives and feelings of women began to be written in particularly clear and
intense ways. Women’s reading, therefore increased enormously in middle – class
homes. Many journals began carrying writings by women and explained why women
should be educated.
2.
From the 1860s. a few Bengali women like Kailash Bashim Debi wrote books
highlighting the experiences of women about how women were imprisoned at homes,
kept in ignorance, forced to do hard domestic labour and treated unjustly by
the very people they served. In the 1880s. in present day Maharashtra, Tarabai
Shinde and Pandita Rama Bai wrote with passionate anger about the miserable
lives of upper-caste Hindu women, especially widows.
3.
In the early twentieth century, journals written for and sometime edited by
women, became very popular. They discussed issues like women’s education,
widowhood, widow remarriage and the national movement.
(b)
Print culture and the poor people:
The poor people could not buy the books because they were very costly. But due
to the spread of print culture, the books were being published on large scale.
In the nineteenth century, prices of the books were reduced in the cities and
sold at crossroads. Consequently the poor people could afford to buy these
books easily. In the early twentieth century, public libraries w ere set up in
cities and towns where poor people could also read the books. By the 1930s.
Bangalore cotton mill workers set up libraries to educate themselves, following
the example of Bombay workers.
(c)
Print culture and Reformers:
The social reformers tried to remove the social evils through the printed
books. They strongly opposed the social evils such as caste system. Widow’
immolation, child marriage, w orship of idols and Brahmanical priesthood. They
supported education, social equality and religious tolerance. The social
refprmers through their books, newspapers laid the stress on the spread of
education among the poor workers. They tried to restrict excessive drinking
among them, to bring literacy and sometimes to propagate the message of
nationalism.
Discuss
Question
1.
Why did some people in eighteenth century Europe think that print culture would
bring enlightenment and end despotism ?
Answer:
Bringing of Enlightenment and end of Despotism through Print Culture Many
people in eighteenth century Europe thought that print culture could bring
enlightenment and end despotism.
In
this connection, the following arguments may be given :
1. In the mid-eighteenth century, there was a common conviction that books were
a means of spreading progress and enlightenment. Many believed that books could
change the world, illetrate society from despotism and tyranny and herald a
time when reason and intellect would rule. Louise-Sebastien Mercier, a novelist
in the eighteenth century France, declared, “The printing press is the most
powerful engine of progress and public opinion is the force that will sweep
despotism away”. Convinced of the hower of print in bringing enlightenment and
destroying the basis of despotism, Mercier proclaimed : Tremble, therefore,
tyrants of the w orld ! Tremble before the virtual writer !
2.
Print popularised the ideas of the Enlightenment thinkers. Collectively, their
writings provided a critical commentary on tradition, superstition and
despotism. They attacked the sacred authority of the church and the despotic
power of the state. The writing of Voltaire and Rousseau were read widely and
their views had a tremendous effect on their minds.
3.
Printing reduced the cost of the books. Book, flooded the markets, reaching out
to an ever growing readership. Now books could reach out to wider sections of
people. Through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, literacy rates went
up in most of Europe. The periodical press developed from the early eighteenth
century. Combining information about current affairs with entertainment.
Similarly, the ideas of scientists and philosophers now became more accessible
to the common people. The spread of print culture played a great role in the
enlightenment and the people came to know about their society, religion,
culture and politics. Their superstitions and social evils came to an end and
they were encouraged to build a progressive society.
Question
2.
Why did some people fear the effect of easily available printed books ? Choose
one example from Europe and one from India.
Answer:
Not everyone welcomed the printed books and those who did, also had fears about
it. Many were of the opinion that the easier access to the printed word and the
wider circulation of books, could have negative effects on people’s mind. It
was feared that if there was no control over what w as printed and read, then
rebellious and irreligious thoughts might spread. It was also feared that the
authority of valuable literature would be destroyed.
·
Example
from Europe:
The Roman Catholic Church troubled by the effects of popular readings and
questioning of faith, imposed severe control over publishers and book sellers
and began to maintain as index of prohibited books from 1558.
·
Example
from India:
In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed. It imposed strict restrictions on
the reports and editorials in the vernacular press.
Question
3.
What were the effects of the spread of print culture for poor people in
nineteenth century India ?
Answer:
Follow ing were the effects of print culture on the poor people in the
nineteenth century:
(1) Due to the spread of print culture in the nineteenth century7, the books in
the cities became very7 cheap and the poor people began to buy them.
(2) As a result of the print culture, many public libraries were set up in the
cities and towns.
(3)
From the late nineteenth century, issues of caste discrimination began to be w
ritten about in many printed trades and essays. Jyotiba Phule wrote about the
injustices of the caste system in his ‘Gulam giri\
(4)
The poor people had an opportunity to read the newspapers and magazines and get
the national, international and local new s through printed materials.
(5)
In some cities, the mill workers set up libraries to educate themselves. These
were sponsored by social reformers who tried to restrict excessive drinking
among them, to bring literacy and sometimes to propagate the message of
nationalism.
Question
4.
Explain how print culture assisted the growth of nationalism in India.
Answer:
1. Indian nationalist newspapers played an important role in the development of
nationalism. These newspapers criticised the repressive policy of the British
government. They reported on colonial misrule and encouraged nationalist
activities. When Punjab revolutionaries were deported in 1907, Balgangadhar
Tilak criticised the repressive policy of the British government in his
‘Kesari’. This led to his imprisionment in 1908, provoking in turn widespread
protests all over India. Thus the newspapers spread the nationalist feelings
among the Indians.
2.
Many books printed in Indian languages also contributed to the development of
nationalism. Vande Matram, Anand Math, and many other books created the
feelings of nationalism in Indian people.
3.
The print culture spread education among the Indians who became aware of their
duties and rights about their country.
4.
New7 forms of print such as novels, dramas, essays spread the feelings of
nationalism among the Indians. Caricatures and cartoons were criticising colonial
rule.
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